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Anne Boleyn: A “Cautionary Tale About Capitalism”

This space used to track the comings and goings of Natalie Portman, that bonny trouper who seemed, once, to redeem the motion picture industry with her genuineness. Everyone seemed so pleased when she announced that following Star Wars she’d retire to private life; that she’d cease to make a spectacle of herself and hunker down to mortal pursuits like industry and family. Of course Miss Portman has since become a felled gaud, taking up ponderous causes while swathed in leatherless vegan clothes bearing her eponymous brand and bereaving one of the notion that there exists people whom Los Angeles could not seduce into its fold of glorious triviality. She’s become one more subject for one more Loved One, or Day of the Locust.

To wit, this interview:

ELLE: Your recent film, The Other Boleyn Girl, strikes me as a classic cautionary tale about female ambition. Your character, the notorious Anne, is punished with rape, humiliation, exile, and ultimately execution for being cunning and opportunistic. Her “golden sister” Mary [played by Scarlett Johansson] wants nothing more than a simple country life and is content to accept whatever fate her father, husband, uncle, and king devise for her—and she gets to live happily ever after.

NATALIE PORTMAN: That’s so interesting, because I really saw it as a cautionary tale about capitalism. All of the characters who subscribe to these values of rising up and gaining power and who will step on anyone to get there are punished. Anne is certainly the most forward about it, but she is following her family’s values. She wants to impress her father even though he betrays her, whereas Mary thinks there’s something sick about this world and removes herself from it. I think it’s very different to be ambitious and to be ruthlessly ambitious, which Anne certainly is in the movie. In reality, an argument can be made that Anne Boleyn was witch-hunted because she had so much power.

ELLE: Do you see any of these dynamics at play in the way Americans have responded to Hillary Clinton’s campaign? She’s a woman with boundless aspirations who is clearly and necessarily calculating in her pursuit of her agenda, and I think we’re still extremely uncomfortable with that kind of overt female striving.

NP: A lot of the stuff people say about her, I hear it and my stomach falls because it’s so sexist. You ask people why they don’t like her and it’s because her husband cheated on her! That was obviously not her choice. She’s so much more polished and experienced than anyone else. Last night, a friend, a social worker in L.A. who works with underprivileged kids, was saying how these girls who have never been interested in politics before are so excited that a woman might be president. I mean, look how many women are in government…Hillary’s one of, what, [a handful of] female senators?

None of this is to say that I will not see The Other Boleyn Girl.

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